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Janet Mefferd has No Use for Gay Rights ‘Talking Points’ that Make ‘No Mention of Sodomy’

Recently, singer Carrie Underwood revealed her support for marriage equality, while Dick and Lynne Cheney publicly supported the marriage of their gay daughter Mary to her partner and even former anti-gay marriage activist David Blankenhorn announced that he had changed his views.

But Janet Mefferd is not impressed, mainly because none of these people have any “reasons” for their views and are unable to provide any “arguments” in favor of them. Instead, Mefferd claims, they are just citing “regurgitated talking points [that are] continually reinforced by an insidious social movement that wants unanimous compliance on its immoral agenda — an agenda that many more Americans would reject if it were brought into broad daylight, where all its lies, obfuscations and straw men could be exposed.”

In fact, Mefferd explains, the “talking points” used to support marriage equality are no different from the talking points used to support the right to choose as gay activists seek to “make “heterosexuals scared to offend homosexuals” and talk about the issue in terms of equality and love while making “no mention of sodomy”:

2. Both agendas falsely play on people’s unnecessary fear and guilt by focusing on the micro personal story, rather than the macro moral issue. For abortion activists, the question often was framed thusly: “What if your daughter found herself in a crisis pregnancy? Shouldn’t she have the right to choose?” The LGBT activist subtly alters his question to this: “What if your daughter announced she’s gay? Shouldn’t she have the right to choose whom to love?” And, of course, if your answer focuses on deeper questions about the effect on society of embracing abortion on demand or so-called homosexual marriage, rather than personal love for your own flesh and blood, then you look like a jerk. This is why the questions are put the way they are. “This isn’t about society. It’s about your daughter. Don’t you love your daughter?” LGBT activists have gained many a quasi-conservative convert just because that person had a gay daughter, son or friend and couldn’t look beyond the love lines. Emphasizing the personal is a very effective tactic, and both lobbies have used it successfully. The abortion lobby did it by making men scared to offend women. The LGBT lobby does it by making heterosexuals scared to offend homosexuals. Same tactic, different objective.

3. Both agendas rely heavily on Orwellian Newspeak. For the abortion activists, the terminology is “a woman’s right to choose,” “reproductive health decision” or “termination of pregnancy.” No mention of babies. For the LGBT activists, the terminology is “equality,” “civil rights” and “love.” No mention of sodomy.

4. Both agendas count on the media to frame the agenda for the general public, reporting only stories that make the agenda look good and its opposition look bad. From Planned Parenthood to women who have had abortions to abortionists themselves, the media dutifully paints the pro-abortion zealots as selfless heroes who just care about women. One-sided stories are vital to the cause, which is why you’ll rarely see more than a token quote from a pro-lifer in any major news report on abortion. And if you’re waiting to see an expose on Planned Parenthood or actual pictures of dismembered babies on a nightly TV newscast, keep on waiting.

The LGBT activists enjoy the same treatment. To the media, homosexuals are an honorable and severely oppressed victim class, and they’re all born gay — no exceptions. Consequently, you’ll only see media portrayals of Awesome Homosexuals. They’re sensitive, good-looking and saintly; they’re wonderful friends with brilliant minds, sharp wits and caring personal advice at the ready. And they’re everywhere: on TV, in the movies, on the news, in the White House (except the non-Awesome ones who recently got caught flipping off portraits of President Reagan). Which brings up a periodic problem the media has when the storyline doesn’t go as planned: you know, like when actress Cynthia Nixon declared that for her, being gay is a choice. Or when singer Melissa Etheridge’s partner, Julie Cypher, left her, with this exit line: “I’m not gay.” But when Jerry Sandusky or Catholic priests sexually abuse little boys, you won’t see any media outlet raise the slightest question about the accused’s sexual preferences. Not relevant, homophobe. End of debate.

5. Both agendas have succeeded by obfuscating the physical death, pain or injury that comes from embracing their agenda. When, again, was the last time you saw a major network broadcast photos of dismembered preborn children? Oh, yes, we already covered that. Never. Similarly, why don’t we ever see a major news analysis on the health risks of homosexuality, as reported on the website of the Centers for Disease Control? http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/topics/msm/index.htm

I guess we are all to believe that the moment America’s First Gay President repealed “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” all the health risks of homosexuality magically went away. Not relevant, homophobe. End of debate.

6. Both agendas have thrived by relying on the Saul Alinsky-esque tactics of targeting, freezing, personalizing and polarizing their opponents. There are no reasonable, honest and fair debates with the Abortion Lobby or the LGBT Lobby. It’s not how they get stuff done. It’s all about making the opposition look bad, in order to skirt the real issue of whether or not their agenda is moral or good for society. So in the agenda-pushing scheme of things, those who support abortion are reasonable, freedom-loving people with a sense of fairness, and those who don’t are judgmental, religious zealots. Those who support so-called homosexual marriage also are reasonable, freedom-loving people with a sense of fairness. And those who don’t are judgmental, religious zealots. See how easy that was?

7. Both agendas seek “religious cover.” It’s why you see stories like the recent news report on the Washington, D.C.-based “Christian” obstetrician, who changed his mind on abortion and decided to start killing preborn children out of his great “compassion” for women. Or why the senior religion editor at The Huffington Post breathlessly reported a story over the weekend about religious people “celebrating” LGBT Pride. Again, religious people who embrace abortion or homosexuality — even if they’re violating the very tenets of their own religion by doing so — are good. But religious people who oppose those practices are evil, bigoted, homophobic and — let’s face it — probably hiding a secret abortion or same-sex affair.

From white supremacists to the radical Religious Right, right-wing extremism is on the rise. Pledge to stand against hate.

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